In a collision which took place in Elizabeth River, in 1855,
between the steamship
Pennsylvania and the steamship
Jamestown, the
Pennsylvania was in fault, and the
collision cannot be imputed to inevitable accident.
Inevitable accident must be understood to mean a collision which
occurs when both parties have endeavored by every means in their
power, with due care and caution and a proper display of nautical
skill, to prevent the occurrence of the accident.
If the night was very dark, it was negligence in the master of
the
Pennsylvania to remain in the saloon until just before
the collision occurred, and if the night was not unusually dark,
there was gross negligence in those who had the management of the
deck.
The helm of the
Pennsylvania was put to starboard when
it ought not to have been, and the supposition that she was backing
is shown not to have been correct by the force with which she
struck the other vessel, which had taken every precaution to avoid
the danger.
It was a case of collision which occurred between the steamship
Jamestown and the steamship
Pennsylvania, the
libel
Page 65 U. S. 308
being filed by the owners of the former. The collision took
place some few miles below the port of Norfolk, in Virginia, under
circumstances which are freely stated in the opinion of the
Court.
The district court decreed in favor of the libellants and
assessed the damages at $1,893.08, with interest from 1st of
February, 1855, till paid, and the circuit court affirmed the
decree.
MR. JUSTICE CLIFFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of the
United States for the Eastern District of Virginia, sitting in
admiralty. The libel was filed in the district court by the
appellees on the thirteenth day of June, 1855. It was a proceeding
in rem against the steamship
Pennsylvania, and
was instituted to recover compensation for certain damage done to
the steamship
Jamestown by means of a collision which
occurred between those steamers in Elizabeth River on the night of
the seventh of January, 1855, some five or six miles below the port
of Norfolk, in the State of Virginia. At the time of the collision,
the
Jamestown was on her regular weekly trip from the port
of Norfolk to Richmond, in the same state, and the
Pennsylvania was proceeding up the river to Norfolk in the
prosecution of her regular semi-monthly trip from Philadelphia to
her place of destination. Libellants allege that the
Jamestown was pursuing her usual and proper course down
the river and that the collision occurred in consequence of
Page 65 U. S. 309
the improper and unskillful management of those in charge of the
other steamer. Process was duly served, and the respondents
appeared and answered to the suit. They admitted the collision, but
alleged, in effect, that it occurred in consequence of the intense
darkness of the night, occasioned by a dense fog, without any such
negligence or fault as is alleged in the libel, and in spite of
every possible precaution on the part of those in charge of their
steamer to prevent it. A decree was entered for the libellants in
the district court, which was affirmed, on appeal, in the circuit
court, and thereupon the respondents appealed to this Court. It is
now conceded by the respondents that the collision was not
occasioned by any fault on the part of those in charge of the
injured vessel, but it is insisted in their behalf that the
colliding steamer was also without fault, and that the collision
was the result of inevitable accident. To establish that defense,
they rely entirely upon the character of the night, as shown by the
evidence, and the circumstances attending the disaster. From the
evidence it appears that the
Jamestown left the wharf at
Norfolk on the seventh of January, 1855, about eleven or half past
eleven o'clock at night, as alleged in the libel. When she started,
there was a thick fog in the harbor, but she met with no difficulty
in passing out, and it so far cleared away in about half an hour
that those in charge of her deck, as she proceeded down the river,
could see the lights and even the hulls of vessels ahead, and the
land on the eastern shore. Several witnesses also testify that the
moon had risen, and that stars were occasionally visible, though
they admit that it was still quite foggy and that there was a heavy
mist on the water. Two competent lookouts were accordingly
stationed at the usual place in the forecastle, and the signal
lights of the steamer were properly displayed. Those precautions
had been taken at the time the steamer left the wharf, but about
the time she passed the naval hospital, the master, as he had been
accustomed to do on similar occasions, left the quarterdeck and
took a position in the rigging of the steamer, some ten feet above
the hurricane deck. Leaving the lookouts properly stationed in the
forecastle to perform their usual duties, he
Page 65 U. S. 310
doubtless chose that more elevated situation to get a less
obstructed view of distant objects, and he testifies that he could
then see a mile and a half ahead, and the evidence furnishes no
good reason to doubt the truth of his statement.
Intending to take the eastern side of the channel, another
precaution also became necessary so as not to incur the hazard of
running the steamer aground, and to guard against any such danger,
he directed the mate to heave the lead at short intervals and to
report to him the soundings, and the order was faithfully obeyed.
Having taken these precautions, he continued to prosecute the
voyage at a moderate rate of speed, sometimes stopping the engine
when the fog shut in and occasionally ringing the bell and sounding
the whistle, and the steamer, pursuing her regular course, rounded
Lambert's Point in perfect safety, passing so near to the buoy
located there that it was seen by the master from his position in
the rigging, and particularly noticed. On arriving there, it was
necessary to change the course of the steamer, and inasmuch as he
had noticed the buoy, he was enabled to perform that duty without
danger of mistake. Orders were accordingly given to the wheelsman
to set the course north one-fourth east and to run by the compass.
During all this time, the master remained in the rigging, and he
testifies that after the steamer rounded the point, he could see
from the buoy to Craney Island lightship, which, according to his
estimate, is a mile and a half. Presently, however, as the steamer
advanced, he saw another light on the larboard bow of the steamer,
and finding upon inquiry that the wheelsman had not seen it, he
called his attention to the fact that there were two lights,
expressing the opinion at the same time that the one last
discovered was the light of the
Pennsylvania coming up the
river. His own steamer at that time was heading north, half east,
and he directed the wheelsman to port the helm so as to keep both
lights well on the larboard bow, which had the effect gradually to
sheer the steamer still closer to the eastern side of the channel.
She had previously been running in about four fathoms of water, but
the mate soon reported that the soundings showed only three, and as
she
Page 65 U. S. 311
advanced, he informed the master that there was but two and a
half fathoms, and cautioned him that there was danger of running
aground. At this time the master saw the signal lights and hull of
the
Pennsylvania as she passed the lightship, on the
western side of the channel. Immediate orders were then given to
ring the bell and sound the whistle, and the master testifies that
the signals were answered from the approaching steamer. Shortly
afterwards, the mate reported that the soundings showed but ten
feet of water, and immediately upon receiving that information he
gave the necessary orders to stop the machinery and reverse the
engine. Both orders were promptly obeyed, and it was then the
master first discovered that the approaching steamer had altered
her course and was heading diagonally across the channel towards
the
Jamestown. They were then less than a quarter of a
mile apart, and seeing that a collision was almost inevitable, be
instantly directed the alarm bell to be rung and the whistle of the
steamer to be sounded, and as there was nothing more that he could
do to avoid the danger, he gave warning to the men in the
forecastle, and left the rigging, and returned to the quarter-deck.
Further reference to the circumstances preceding the collision, so
far as respects the injured steamer, is unnecessary at this stage
of the investigation. According to the evidence, it seems that the
Pennsylvania arrived off Cape Henry at an early hour in
the evening of the day of the collision, but in consequence of the
fog and the
brk:
difficulties of the navigation, she did not enter the river till
after eleven o'clock at night. She proceeded up the river at the
rate of about six miles an hour, and the mate, who was the acting
pilot after she entered the river and had charge of her deck,
admits that she ran very close to the before-mentioned lightship,
and that her course at that time was south, half east, and it is
not possible to doubt that if she had continued on that course a
short time longer, all danger would have been avoided. Such,
however, was not the fact, as is clearly shown by the pilot
himself, and we refer to his testimony in preference to that of the
master because the latter remained in the
Page 65 U. S. 312
saloon until just before the collision occurred. Among other
things, the pilot admits that shortly after his steamer passed the
lightship, he gave the order to starboard the helm, and what seems
even more remarkable in cases of this description, he acknowledges
that he gave the order after he knew that another steamer was
approaching, though he denies that he had seen her lights. His
theory is, and he accordingly testifies, that he first gave the
order to stop and back, and inasmuch as that order had been
executed and the steamer had actually commenced to back, that
putting the helm a-starboard had the same effect as porting the
helm would have produced if the steamer had been going ahead. But
it is a sufficient answer to that theory, as applied to this case,
to say that the evidence shows beyond the reach of doubt that the
steamer was still advancing at the rate, at least, of three or four
miles an hour, so that, upon his own theory, he committed an error,
and according to his own testimony he committed it with a knowledge
of the approaching danger. Three or four witnesses, including the
master of the colliding steamer, testify that she was advancing
three or four miles an hour when the collision occurred, and the
damage done to the injured steamer proves to a demonstration that
her headway must have been very considerable. On the contrary, the
injured steamer had nearly stopped, and being already as close to
the eastern side of the channel as the means of navigation would
allow, she was almost as powerless to prevent the collision as if
she had been lashed to the wharf from which she started. It was
under these circumstances that the two steamers came together, and
the evidence shows that the colliding steamer struck the other on
the port bow near the forward gangway, some thirty or forty feet
abaft the stem. As described by the witnesses, it was a full blow
at right angles, and had the effect to force the stem of the
colliding steamer some six feet into the hull of the other, tearing
up the deck of the forecastle a third part of the way across the
vessel, and breaking into two pieces six or eight of the largest
timbers. Looking at the whole circumstances of the collision, it is
vain for the respondents to suppose that
Page 65 U. S. 313
this Court can hold that it was the result of inevitable
accident. Where the collision occurs exclusively from natural
causes and without any negligence or fault either on the part of
the owners of the respective vessels or of those entrusted with
their control and management, the rule of law is that the loss must
rest where it fell, on the principle that no one is responsible for
such an accident if it was produced by causes over which human
agency could exercise no control.
Stainback v.
Rae, 14 How. 533; 1 Pars.M.L. 187. But that rule
can have no application whatever to a case where negligence or
fault is shown to have been committed on either side, for if the
fault was one committed by the libellant alone, proof of that fact
is of itself a sufficient defense, or if the respondent alone
committed the fault, then the libellant is entitled to recover, and
clearly if both were in fault, then the damages must be equally
apportioned between them. Plainly, therefore, it is only when the
disaster happens from natural causes and without negligence or
fault on either side that the defense set up in this case can be
admitted. Inevitable accident, as applied to cases of this
description, must be understood to mean
"a collision which occurs when both parties have endeavored, by
every means in their power, with due care and caution and a proper
display of nautical skill, to prevent the occurrence of the
accident."
The Locklibo, 3 W.Rob. 318.
The John
Frazer, 21 How. 184. It is not inevitable accident,
as was well remarked by the learned judge in the case of
The
Juliet Erskine, 6 Notes of Cases 634, where a master proceeds
carelessly on his voyage and afterwards circumstances arise when
"it is too late for him to do what is fit and proper to be done."
He must show that he acted seasonably, and that he "did everything
which an experienced mariner could do, adopting ordinary caution,"
and that the collision ensued in spite of such exertions.
The
Rose, 7 Jur. 381. Unless the rule were so, it would follow
that the master might neglect the special precautions which are
often necessary in a dark night, and when a collision had occurred
in consequence of such neglect, he might successfully defend
himself upon
Page 65 U. S. 314
the ground that the disaster had happened from the character of
the night, and not from any want of exertion on his part to prevent
it.
The Batavier, 40 Eng.L. & Eq. 25.
The
Europa, 2 Eng.L. & 564.
The Mellona, 5 Notes of
Cases 558. Applying these principles to the present case, it is
obvious that the defense set up by the respondents cannot be
sustained. They not only fail to show that the steamer was without
fault, but the testimony of those in charge of her incontestably
proves that they were guilty of negligence in more than one
particular. Both steamers were in the prosecution of their regular
and stated trips, and of course those in charge of them knew or
ought to have known that they were liable to meet each other on the
route, and if it was so dark that the lights of an approaching
steamer could not be seen, it was negligence in the master, while
his steamer was proceeding at the rate of six miles an hour, to
remain in the saloon, wholly inattentive to the peculiar dangers
incident to the character of the night, and if it was not unusually
dark, then it is clear that there was gross negligence on the part
of those in charge of the deck. It is shown by the evidence that
the colliding steamer had two lookouts, but it is not shown what,
if any, duty they performed in the emergency, or that any inquiries
were made of them either when the course of the steamer was changed
near the lightship or when the pilot heard the noise made by the
wheels of the approaching steamer. But the great fault committed on
the occasion was that of putting the helm to starboard instead of
keeping the course or porting it when it became known that the
other steamer was approaching, and the excuse given for it by the
pilot -- that he supposed his own steamer was backing -- only adds
to the magnitude of the error, as it shows that the order was given
without knowing what its effect would be, which could only have
happened from indifference or inattention to duty.
For these reasons, we are of the opinion that the decision of
the circuit court was correct, and the decree is accordingly
Affirmed with costs.